5,705 research outputs found
Weyl Geometry as Characterization of Space-Time
Motivated by an axiomatic approach to characterize space-time it is
investigated a reformulation of Einstein's gravity where the pseudo-riemannian
geometry is substituted by a Weyl one. It is presented the main properties of
the Weyl geometry and it is shown that it gives extra contributions to the
trajectories of test particles, serving as one more motivation to study general
relativity in Weyl geometry. It is introduced its variational formalism and it
is established the coupling with other physical fields in such a way that the
theory acquires a gauge symmetry for the geometrical fields. It is shown that
this symmetry is still present for the red-shift and it is concluded that for
cosmological models it opens the possibility that observations can be fully
described by the new geometrical scalar field. It is concluded then that this
reformulation, although representing a theoretical advance, still needs a
complete description of their objects.Comment: 12 page
Time-dependent cosmological constant in the Jackiw-Teitelboim cosmology
We study the obtainment of a time-dependent cosmological constant at D=2 in a
model based on the Jackiw-Teitelboim cosmology. We show that the cosmological
term goes to zero asymptotically and can induce a nonsingular behavior at the
origin.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex4, twocolum
Nonlinear electrodynamics and the gravitational redshift of highly magnetised neutron stars
The idea that the nonlinear electromagnetic interaction, i. e., light
propagation in vacuum, can be geometrized was developed by Novello et al.
(2000) and Novello & Salim (2001). Since then a number of physical consequences
for the dynamics of a variety of systems have been explored. In a recent paper
Mosquera Cuesta & Salim (2003) presented the first astrophysical study where
such nonlinear electrodynamics (NLEDs) effects were accounted for in the case
of a highly magnetized neutron star or pulsar. In that paper the NLEDs was
invoked {\it a l\`a} Euler-Heisenberg, which is an infinite series expansion of
which only the first term was used for the analisys. The immediate consequence
of that study was an overall modification of the space-time geometry around the
pulsar, which is ``perceived'', in principle, only by light propagating out of
the star. This translates into an significant change in the surface redshift,
as inferred from absorption (emission) lines observed from a super magnetized
pulsar. The result proves to be even more dramatic for the so-called magnetars,
pulsars endowed with magnetic () fields higher then the Schafroth quantum
electrodynamics critical -field. Here we demonstrate that the same effect
still appears if one calls for the NLEDs in the form of the one rigorously
derived by Born & Infeld (1934) based on the special relativistic limit for the
velocity of approaching of an elementary particle to a pointlike electron [From
the mathematical point of view, the Born & Infeld (1934) NLEDs is described by
an exact Lagrangean, whose dynamics has been successfully studied in a wide set
of physical systems.].Comment: Accepted for publication in Month. Not. Roy. Ast. Soc. latex file,
mn-1.4.sty, 5 pages, 2 figure
A universal, turbulence-regulated star formation law: from Milky Way clouds to high-redshift disk and starburst galaxies
Whilst the star formation rate (SFR) of molecular clouds and galaxies is key
in understanding galaxy evolution, the physical processes which determine the
SFR remain unclear. This uncertainty about the underlying physics has resulted
in various different star formation laws, all having substantial intrinsic
scatter. Extending upon previous works that define the column density of star
formation (Sigma_SFR) by the gas column density (Sigma_gas), we develop a new
universal star formation (SF) law based on the multi-freefall prescription of
gas. This new SF law relies predominantly on the probability density function
(PDF) and on the sonic Mach number of the turbulence in the star-forming
clouds. By doing so we derive a relation where the star formation rate (SFR)
correlates with the molecular gas mass per multi-freefall time, whereas
previous models had used the average, single-freefall time. We define a new
quantity called maximum (multi-freefall) gas consumption rate (MGCR) and show
that the actual SFR is only about 0.4% of this maximum possible SFR, confirming
the observed low efficiency of star formation. We show that placing
observations in this new framework (Sigma_SFR vs. MGCR) yields a significantly
improved correlation with 3-4 times reduced scatter compared to previous SF
laws and a goodness-of-fit parameter R^2=0.97. By inverting our new
relationship, we provide sonic Mach number predictions for kpc-scale
observations of Local Group galaxies as well as unresolved observations of
local and high-redshift disk and starburst galaxies that do not have
independent, reliable estimates for the turbulent cloud Mach number.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters, Movie
available here:
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~chfeder/pubs/universal_sf_law/universal_sf_law.htm
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